The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, November 17, 1927, Image 2

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    The
Wright brot thers,
|
DSACREEMENTS and disputes
are due not so much to malice
and selfishness as to misunderstand-
ing. One of the easiest things in
the world is for one person to misun-
derstand the motives and purposes of
another. Disagreements are the more
asily solved when two persons dis-
passionately meet together for the
purpose of discussing the disputed
point from the viewpoint of each oth-
er. Fallure to do this has led to many
a tragedy and brogen friendship.
All the radii of a circle meet at the
center. The spokes of a wheel meet at
the hub. The more distant the spokes
are from the hub, the farthe. are they
apart. The nearer they get to the
Hints for the Man
and for the Woman
~ By VIOLA BROTHERS SHORE
FOR THE GOOSE—
Joust think how much more
able life would be if
you said, “How are you?”
to answer the truth.
unbear
every time
people was
Two Is
lonely.
comp'ny where a crowd Is
FOR THE GANDER—
A man can sometimes up In a
woman's estimation by refusin’ her
But every woman despises a
makes a promise and re
g0
some’ nm,
man that
negs
“Here Is a pack of eum,”
chewin'
more lastin’ dent on a wom-
“I'll get you a string of |
makes a
an than
pearls.”
health
some
HE department of New
York time ago reported a
rate of four new cases a day of the
mysterious malady known as sleeping
sickness, .
The patient goes to sleep and re-
mains dormant for days weeks,
some of them never awakening, oth.
ers waking for a few minutes and im-
ur
center the nearer do they get to each
other. The best piace to solve a prob.
lem {8 at the center of the radii of
the different points of view.
The attitude of not respecting what
the other person thinks Is a very dan-
gerous philosophy of life, Every per.
son has the right to his own opinion
and the right to express It cannot be
denied. It is when people get togeth
er that good is accomplished. A house
divided against itself cannot stand. A
chain is no stronger than it. weakest
link, Your enemy may become your
best friend when once you thoroughly
understand each other,
If 1 knew you and you knew me,
If both of us could clearly
And with an inner sight divine
The meaning of your heart
wee,
and mine
I'm sure that we would
And clasp our hands in friendliness
ir thoughts would pleasantly agree
A I knew you and you knew me
(6) 1927, Western Newspaber 1
Aiffer less
Union.)
(© by MeClure Newspaper Syndicate
By F. A. WALKER
mediately relapsing Into coma,
The disease, when it first made its
appearance, was supposed to be a re-
sult of influenza, Later, cases have
developed when there has been no in
fluenza,
No treatment seems to be effective
in accomplishing a cure, the only pro
cedure being to sustain the strength
© McClure Newspaper Syndicate
ded, Gee,
xe: anda. S—
#
soni ao ® a
This is Wright field, named for the
Class No New Idea
known to the ancient
Egypt: a very early date, The
tombs of the fourth and fifth dynas
ties, abour 4000 B. C., show glass
blowers at work. It was also known
to the people of Phoenicia, Assyria,
jabylonin, Persia, China, India,
Greece and tome,
Glass wus
ns at
Ye te Behe WH Ve He Re Ve He Ne Re Ne HU AE We
=|
EHR IRRR
%e tebe Behe
HIS is for young ladies still un-
married, Go upstalrs backward,
into vour chamber backward and get
into bed backward. Drink some salt
and water and If you dreamn of some
one bringing you a drink of water it
will be your future husband, This su-
perstition Is quite general in the
United States and Canada,
The principal feature of this super.
gtitlon is the backward movement en-
joined. To put one's self in harmony
with the world of spirits it is essential
to reverse the order proper for the
world of the flesh. William Wells
Newell, in his introduction Mrs.
lergen's collection of Current Super-
stitions, says of superstitions similar to
the one under consideration: “There
seem indications showing an
original of some of these
usng with the lower world; such
may be the significance of the back
wird movement. In order to put one's
self in connection with the world of
darkness it 18 necessary to reverse the
proper for the world of
light. This principle, appearing in
medieval magic, could be Hus
trated from savage cusiom.” But
principle of going backward, the prin
the order, In ma
antedates the Middle ages und its ex.
igtence among savage tribes would in
dieate that it was of primitive origin,
And it Is not necessarily the “powers
of darkness” with which connection is
to
to be
association
OR
procedure
nlso
the
reverse
ciple of gic
:
i“ T THIS time of the year,” said
A Grandfathen Turkey, “1 lke to
1k to all the in the barn
yard.”
“Gobble,
other turkeys,
father Turkey.”
“Yes talk to us” said Teddy Tur
key. “Tell us anything at all We're
well fed and we feel like a little rest,
“We like wandering
adventuring.”
“No,” said Gra
turkeys
gobble, gobble” sald the
“Do talk to us, Grand
don't feel
ndfather Turkey, "of
course not,
“Why do you say Of
asked Teddy Turkey.
“Ah, you are but
You do not understand.”
father Turkey,
“Won't you explain it to me?
Teddy Turkey,
Now Grandfather Turkey was much
pleased when Teddy Turkey
course not’?
a young turkey
sald Grand.
asked
speech,
father
plaining
gobbling.
“Yes, 1 will explain many things”
gnid Grandfather Turkey, “and 1 wili
as you all gather about
There was nothing Grand
Turkey enjoyed more than ex
and talking and strutiing snd
do 80 gg so0n
me."
So all the turkeys gathered about
See PPP Pode
of the patient by nourishing feeding
and waiting for nature to overcome
the strange attack.
Sleep, natural or unnatural, has
been a scientific mystery ever since
the first human lay down to rest and,
closing his lapsed into uncon
sciousness,
We go to sleep by degrees. One
by one the senses become Inactive,
The first to disappear Is
sight. We that by closing
our eyes,
After sight goes taste, smell and
touch and when those four have be
come dormant we are sound asleep.
The sense of hearing never entirely
stops, It is the sentinel sense, duller
in action than when we are awake,
that stays on the job while the others
are resting.
When we are asleep we are In a
condition next door to death, Only
the administration of an anesthetic
brings us nearer to the condition of
lifelessness,
eyos,
SON Se
eliminate
Some people and some animals sleep
very deeply and soundly. With them
the unknown sense which awakens us
from sleep seems to be less keen and
active,
Some people require, or think they
require much sleep, others do with
very little, Some of the lower forms
of life are sald not to sleep at all.
The ant, one of the most contin.
ously active of all living organisms,
has never been found asleep, It will
work without cessation for periods as
long as 12 hours and then, after a
short rest but without sleep, it begins
again its feverish aetivity.
Is there some possible way by which
man could go without sleep? If there
ig no one lias ever discovered it,
Soldiers in the war were carried to
the Hit of endurance without sleep
and marched when the motions of the
limbs were practically automatic.
It is imposeible to overcome, by any
means now known, the demand of the
senses for rest and no effort of will
power can conquer it,
@ by MeClure Newspaper Syndicates
By MARTHA MARTIN
Grandfather Turkey and he begun to
tell them of many things
“First 1 tittle
barnyard said
Turkey. “Jackie, the
vated the little girl
daughter of the farmer,
“Whenever Jackie hea
he begins to
knows her by her
1't walt until he
“Then he ki
him and she kisses him,
are the
sory sweet
news of the
Grandfather
je
have a
to tell,”
horse, is
the
to who Is
her foot
Yes he
und
re
steps neigh
footsteps
does sees her,
sues her when she
in see 100
“Oh, best of friends
the
they
way
*} Will Explain Many Things” Said
Grandfather Turkey."
neighs when he hears her in the dis
tance,
“Then there ig one other
wish to say before | begin
some Turkey news,
“That is that horseradizh is an herb
and people grate it and then put vin
egar on it and eat it.
“1 don’t know why it is called horee
radish, Turkey children, but 1 do know
that horses don't eat it. 1 bave heard
thing 1
to tell
le Ye We le We Be de Sr He Ue Ve Mr Be
established by the backward move
ment—though in medieval magic
was generally the object ; but with th
world of spirits generally, The re
verse ritual might be called an phas
of sympathetic magie,
in primitive man’s philosophy.
(I by McClure Newspaper Syndicate y
semnsinonn ll Prams
GIRLGIGS°
»
appr, 1900. by Tow Bal Ryman. bon |
“The Chinese are be
tronblesame lot,”
Lii, “but ut least they
singing, "China must
my mother came from
getting
BAYS
don’t go
he
there”
SOOOCODOL
that one of the reasons i
enlled borseradish Is bed
strong herb
®O
aL
an and horses
to he
“1 heard
dren saying
strong.
sther foo for horses '™
sobible,
2 hhile
a
“It woul 1d $e very fooli
“1 must tell you a 1}
ory, 100,
“Our ancestors, or those
before us,
rope, they went to Mexican,
then they became domestic tn
and now are thoroughly American.
“But our wild turkeys of this com
try are
they're
art
“Oh,
no one thi
Turkes
who came were from
then
pot the ones from whom ww
descended,
we have our own history.
nk as they see us
and strutting in the bamyare
have no history.
have- history
for our
hat w
we
§ Oye
and
and
ancesiors
“For
raphy,
travelsd
that,
“Ah gobble, gobble
our family who finally end
platter have had a history
them, at any rate!”
(Copyright)
hay
foo,
up on
back «
b.
&
+
©
ODO ODOT
@
1
¢
©
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WOMEN OF
MIDDLE AGE
| Praise Lydia E. ydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound
Mrs. Annle Kwinskl of 526 15¢t Ave.
nue, Milwaukee, Wis, writes that she
became s0 weak and
run-down that she
was not able to do
her housework, She
saw the name Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vege-
table Compound in
the paper and said
to her husband, “I
will try that medi-
cine and see if it
will help me.” Bhe
gays she took six
bottles and is feel.
ing much better,
Mrs. Mattie Adams, who lives
Downing Street, Brewton, Ala.
as follows: “A friend recommended
Lydia E, Pinkham’'s Vegetable Com.
pound and since taking it I feel like
a different woman.”
With her children grown up, the mid-
in
writes
read the new books, see the new
enjoy her grand-children, take
part in church and civic
Far from being pushed aside
che finds a fall
That is, if ber
Thousands of women past fifty, say
owe their vigor and health to
Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
and are recommending it to
Sculpin Had Traveled
When
Joe and
out
had
Firmly
tall was a plece
ached to the
mked
a vv pd +
nrveq
lock
flor, pulled a sculpin
he found he
history.
Clukey, a
a fish with a
wire
gmail piece of
“as. B.
Me™
whit i
Nort
rhor,
heast har
Epecime question 4
shore line
to Rockland .
ETS
Millions rely on HILL'S to end
colds in a day and ward off
Grippe and Flu, No quicker
remedy for yor
Be Sure Itsy K
~ CASCARA §
Get Red Bx
UININE
with portrait
Garfield Tea
Was Your
Grandmother’s Remedy
For every stomach
and intestinal ilL
This good old-fash-
loned herb home
remedy for consti-
pation, stomach ills
and other derange-
’ ments of the sys
tem so prevalent these days is in even
greater favor as a family medicine
than in your grandmother's day.
bricgs sstonishing, gratifying rescits
$s making baby's stomach digest
food and bowels move as
they should at teething
On a Bus Top
Although the story got around a lot
they
heard it years ago anyhow-—we will
report that two business men of th
garment industry were overheard in
animated conversation on a bus top.
Finally one of them paused and de-
manded : “Well, what do you think of
my proposition?”
“TH tell you in two words,
said his
associate, “Impossible.”—The New
Yorker.
"
Conversion always works better
than compulsion,
A Raw, Sore Throat
made in milder form for
babies and small children,
Ask for Children’s Musterole.